The Bainbridge democrat. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 18??-????, April 20, 1882, Image 1

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; JC W S .- • ; aa-— **■* rfae Weekly Democrat. IKfl K. RESELL, Kdltorainl Prop’r THURSDAY. APRIL 20. 1882. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. >er Annuo* $2 00 5x Month* 1 00 bre* Months ”& iny'* Copy 10 Invariably in advance. advertising rates and rules. Advertisements in-erted at $2 per square ir firit insertion, and $1 for each subse- lent #ne. A square is eight solid lines of this type, beral term* made with contract adverti- irs. I. ooal aotices of eight lines are 515 per latter, er $50 per annum. Local notices leet than three months are subject to ansient rates. Contract advertisers who desire their ad- •tisements changed, must give us two iek* notice, Changing advertisements, unless othcr- ^ stipulated in contract, will be changed 20 cents per square. II. arriage and obituary notices, tributesof , ect, and other kindred notices, charged other advertisements. idvertiseinents must take the run of the ier. as we do not contract to keep them my particular place. nnouncements for candidates are <£10, it f for one insertion lills are due upon the appearance of the irtisement, anti the money will he col* id as needed by tl*t proprietoi. e shall adhere strictly to the aboverales, will depart from them under no circum- ces. SlNESSdk PROFESSIONAL. MEDICAL CARD. M. J. Nicholson, [as removed to Twilight, Miller coun- Georgia. OlHce iu J. S.- Clilton’s fell.!*,'82. MEDICAL CARD. E. J. Morgan as removed his office to the drug store, ierly occupied by Dr, Harrell. i>< >i- r -e on West street, south of Shotwell, ri calls at night will reach him. CHARLES C. BUSH, ttorney at Law COLQUITT. GA. •ompt attention given to all business en- ited to me. DENTISTRY. C. Curry, D. D. S., an be found dally at his office on South id street, up stairs, in E. Johnson’s ding, where he is ready to attend to the its of the public at reasonable rates. ^ dec-5-78 7GiI.li, M - O’NEAL McGILL & O’NEAL, torneys at Law. BAINBKIDGK, GA. eir office will be found over the post of- IIOSAI.SON, liyr.oN B. BOWER. BOWER & DONALSON. Drneysand Counsellers at Law. lice in the court bouse. Will practice rcatur and adjoining counties, and vhere by special contract. a-25 7 ICTOR M.L. BATTLE, DentiSt- nice over Hinds Store, West side ■t house. Has tine dental engine, and have everything to make bis office -class. Terms cash. Office hours !* t. to 4 p. m. jumlotl JEFF D. TALBERT, ttorney at Law, Bainbridge. Georgia, fill practice in all the courts, and biisi- intrusted to liiscare will be* promptly tmled to. Office over store of M. K. ett A .Sou. feb.23, t>2. DR. L. H. PEACOCK, ctfully tenders his professional serv- the people of Bainbridge and vicitti- Ece over store of J. D. Harrell k Hro |ence on West end of Broughton vhere he can be found at night. ■it 6,1881— H. F. SHARON, orney at Law. Office in Court House. II practice iu ali tiie courts of the |y Circuit and Supreme Court of 'a. In the Circuit and Supreme i of Florida, and elsewhere by special ct. nbridge. Ga., April 23, T8S1—ly. MACON . uJO- special instruction in bookkeeping, inship, business arithmetic, eorres- pce, bill heading, telegraphy and l business routine. • CKAY, - - PftNICIPAL. terms, information’ as to bo:friling Iply to the principal- P. O. box Won', Georgia. BLUER HD JEWELER. L. M Griffin’s old stand, comer l>utk Broad and Troup streets, Ige, - - - Ga. and repairing, watches, Bwing-macliines and all kinds of lone with neatness and dispatch. “’All work warranted. go, Ga., August 4, 1374.— BY BEX. E. RUSSELL. | BAINBRIDGE, GA, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1882. YOL. 11.—NO. 27. A Primt«*r’M Protest. O, why don’t people form their a’a And finish off their ft’s— Why do they make such crooked c’a And such confounded it's? W T bv do they form snch shocking e’g, And f s with ague fists ? Their g's and h's are too much For any printer’s wit3. What a human eye is without sight Is an t without a dot. .7 s are such curious, crooked things We recognize them not. K ought to stand for kussedness, But comes iu well for kick. L’g and m’s are mischievous ; While n'a just raise Old Nick. O’s arc rarely closed at all, And p‘» are shabby tilings. Q h might as well he spider s legs, And r's musquito wings. Some people make a passing a Who never cross a t; Otln rs ufee the self-same strokes To form a u or ». IPs get strangely mixed, ,l"s seem on a spree; Yds a skeleton on wires; Zounds, how we swear at z. dc.yot, just think what typo’s get From drivers ot the quill? Tliey cal! us such a careless set, And scribb’e on at will. Well, they will scribble, and we must swear And vainly try to please, Till they go back to school and learn To make their a b e’s. —Printer's Circular. ASLEiA'l’ AAI> BAVOL'ST. Despite the opinion—rather anti- French—of a certain General who is pleased to throw upon Napoleon the whole blame of the disastrous war in Russia; despite the admiration for the defeat of thb Russians during the march to Moscow, it is but. j list to declare that elsewhere than in the imprudence and incapacity of the Emperor, the essential causes of our misfortunes will be found, and “le grand hominu’ was not so much of a simpleton as he wishes to make appear. i’erhaps, too, the complaints of certain Generals, who preteuded to believe that war ran bo waged without risking limbs and lives—the effeminacy o! some and the jealousy of others—aiay have contributed in no small degice to sew dissension and discouragement in the midst of our army. Here is a fatal proof of that rivalry among officers which rendered the soldiers uncertain how to act and frequently took from them that enthu-iasm so necessary for the success of an expedition. Napoleon had recently placed Davoust under Murat, who commanded the van guard of the army. The/ were now (the 27th of August) at Slawkow; on the 28th Murat pushed the enemy to ward the Osina. lie crossed the river with his cavalry, and vigorously attack ed the Russians who were pasted on a hill on the opposite side of the stream, where they could easily maintain an obstinate fight. They did so at first with some success, and Muiat, wishing to spare bis cavalry in a spot where the ground was difficult, commanded one of Davousi’s batteries to sustain his movement and annoy the enemy of the heights. He waited some moments to see the effect of this new attack ; but nil was quiet; and the Russians, profiting by this extraordinary inaction, poured down by their eminences, drove back the cavalry to the bordiys of the Osma, whieh runs in the hollow of the lavine, and almost precipitated them in to the river. Murat, by words and example, en couraged his soldiers, and sent another message to the commandant of the bat tery ; but stiil his order was not obeyed; on the contrary, word was returning that the commandant, alleging his in structions, which under penalty of de position forbade him to engage without command from Davoust, refused to fire. Rage glowed within Murat, but a more immediate peril caffed him ; the Rus sians continued to bear down upon the cavalry. lie headed.thc fourth laucers, threw himself upou the enemy, and by a fierce struggle carried those heights that Davoust might have swept with his cannon. The next day the two officers stood before Napoleon ; the King of Naples, secure in having justified his rashness by success; the Prince of Eckmul, firm in his opinion, founded on a well tried science. Murat complained bit terly of Davoust’s commands to his subordinates. The Emperor listened, with his hands behind him, his head slightly bowed, to conceal an air of satisfaction, pushing, at the same time, a Russian ball with his toe, which he followed as it rolled, with seeming in terest. Davoust, incensed, did not re main silent. ‘Sir’ said he. addressing the Emper or, ‘the King of Naples must be cured of the habit of making useless and im prudent attacks, that only fatigue the vanguard. Never before was men’s blood so prodigally spilled; and, be lieve me, it is wovth preserving in a a campaign like this.’ ‘The Prince of Eckmul has discover ed an excellent way to do so,’ replied Murat disdainfully ; ‘it is to forbid his soldiers to fight. Apparently he fol lows the same receipt himself.’ The unbending Davoust, who had incontrovertibly proved himself brave, and who now especially wished to prove himself in the right, addressed him in angry tone. ‘And what have all your rash acts accomplished against an army which always effects a retreat, previously de cided on and wisely planned ; or against a rear guard which never abandons a position, save when on the point of being beaten V ‘Wiil you tell me,’ answered Murat, sneeringly, ‘when it would abandon its position if it were never attacked nor on the point of being heaten ?’ ‘Some hours later!’ said Davoust, who had understandingty judged of the Russian General’s plans, ‘because re treat is a part undertaken and invariably executed; on which they will accom plish by fighting or not fighting, just as we please. What do we gain, then, from attacking troops who would retire to morrow, if not .routed to-day'?’ ‘Glory!’ replied Murat. “And lose thereby half the van guard,’ sharply continued Davoust. •We shall see, when we arrive without cavalry at Moscow, how much assistance the glory of the King ot Naples will be to us, with not a horseman under his command.’ Murat, exasperated, fiercely inter rupted him. ‘Marshal,’ he said, ‘you wouid find nothing imprudent nor use less in my conduct were I under your orders as you ate under mine; it is well known, however, tlurt the Prince of Eckmul likes not to be subject to any; that it would please him to be reputed the hero of this expedition, even at the expen-e of the most exalted ; but I swear to him there is a place for all —let him try to find his.’ The reproach told: Murat had in tentionally laid emphasis on the words, ‘the Prince of Eckmul likes.not to be subject to any,’ and a slight contraction was observable on the brow of Napoleon. Davoust. aware that he was attacked in a vulnerable quarter, and for a thing of which the Emperor frequently accused him, hastened to protest that it was his devotion alone that caused him to speak and act as he did. Murat interrupted him still more fiercely.’ ‘So! it is hatred to me! Well, then, it is time to end : it has existed since the campaign in Egypt; and I am weary of it. If Davoust will recol lect that he wears a sword as well as myself, J give him—’ At these words Napoleon, until now apparently indifferent to the controver sy, raised his head, measured Murat with a look that made the words die upon his lips, and that authoritative tone which he so rarely assumed, but whieh was irresutible, said to him: ‘The King of Naples had nothing to give the Prince of Eckmul, but—or ders.’ Murat, satisfied, notwithstanding the harshness of the accent, that these words established his right of command, returned to his quarters. The Emperor, alone with Davoust, spoke to him kind ly ; but better seconded in bis rapid marching and his desire of giving pitch ed battle to the Russians, by the im petuosity of Murat than the prudeDt reserve of Davoust, he represented to him in a friendly manner, ‘that all kinds of merit could not be united in the same person; that to lead a van guard was not to direct an army ; and that Murat, with his boldness, might possibly have overtaken Bagration, whom Davoust had suffered, by his dilatoriness, to escape.’ Notwithstand ing its mildness, this reproach wound ed Davoust, who retired to his tent more than ever enraged against the King of Naples. Shortly after, the lat ter received a positive assurance that whichever pursued the quarrel further should be forthwith remanded- to France. The next day Murat %nd Davonat to- together. and by command of the Emperor, invaded Uiasma. But tbe day after they were again at variance, for Murat finding the enemy in front of him determined to fight, and gave the word to attack. His cavalry immediately rushed upon that of the Russians, and were in turn pursued by the infantry of the latter. Murat determ ined to advance his or rather Davoust's infantry, and accordingly placed himself at the head of the Compans division. At this juncture the Prince of Eckmul came up, and, reproaching Murat for this new and useless combat, refused to sustain him. He forbade Compans to stir. Mu rat renewed iiis orders. Davoust only the more persisted in his. At this insult, Mu rat’s rage, before furious, became suddenly tranquil; he appealed to his rank, to his right; Davoust eared for neither, and Compans, in an uncertainty, obeyed the reiterated orders of. his immediate com mander, at whieh Jfurat, with haughty dignity, aud a calmness unheard of in char acters like his turned toward Bolliard.the chief of his staff. “Tell the Emperor," said Murat, to dispose of his van guard; tell him that there is a general too few or a soldier too many; as for me, I go to extricate my pr- vate men from the embarrassment in which I have placed them.” Then addressing Davoust, he added, “Marshal, we meet again.’* “Undoubtedly,” replied he, with asperity; “if you return"—pointing, at the same time, to the almost routed cavalry. “I shall return,” said Murat, with a look full of his most determined resolution. Immediately while the Prince of Eck mul retirud, Murat flew to his cavalry, and rallying them with his voice, placed in tlie'r front those towering plumes and glit tering orders that were never absent from the post of danger. His soldiers gathered round to defend him, and, as he advanced, he found biinseif once more triumphant. Ah!” cried Murat, “glory is still our own.” So saying, he left the field and retired to his tent Still breathl -ss from the com bat, his hands yet tremelous from the blows that he had dealt, he wrote a billet on an ornamented and perfumed paper. As he finished it Bolliard entered ; aud with out interrogating him as to the result of his message, Murat held the note toward him. “Bolliard,” said he quietly, “take this billet to Davoust.” “It is a challenge,” he coolly replied. “I will Dot cairy it,” said Bolliard reso lutely. Murat was electrified at thi3 answer. He turned toward his officer, even more aston ished than enraged. “And you too?” said he, suffoerting with passion. “Sire, siye,” cried Bolliard, “yon shall not make me accessory to your down-fall; the Emperor is resolved and the first menace will be the signal of your dismissal.” “Well, dismiss me; there are other places than thi3 to die in !” furiously an swered Murat. “He forgets his army in Spain—let Mm give me that—let him give me a regiment—let him Biake me a simple soldier if he will; I owe him my blood inv life, but my honor is my own, Bolbaid 1 do you Rear, Bolliard, my honor is my own, and I was brave before he wa3 Emperor! Go carry this note, I tell you—. “Sire,” said Bolliard, quickly, you owe him also a crown whose dignity you have no right to compromise with an officer ol the Empire—” “A crown 1” interrupted Murat, more and more exasperated, aud has this crown hindered me from being insulted to my face—has it caused me to be respected ? Look! said he seizing his arms with a savage joy; these have purchased me re spect all my life, and will never abandon me. Go Bolliard, go!” “You are a king,” answered the Generl, “and therefore Davoust will refuse.” “Then.” cried Murat, “he will be a cow ardly— “’Tis false!” replied Bolliard, fiercely eyeing the king. Murat had his sword and pistol in hand; at this flat contradiction he gazed with a stupefied air at his General, who stood calm and resolute before him. Suddenly the express on of his face changed; rage abandoned it. and an amazing grief spread over its haughty majesty. He cast his arms from him. rent his clothes, tore off his jewels aud trampled them under his feet—and as he assayed to speak he burst into tears. “You are right Bolliard, he is no coward, and will refuse. But I ain a miserable king without power; a king whom the meanest soldier may scorn !” A.big tear rolled from the hero’s eye, and he buried his face in his hands. Bolliard took ad- of the momentary weakness to give him prudent counsel; he pacified him. flattened his pride, excited his courage, and ended by saying: “If the Empeaor were to give Davoust the command of the vanguard he would act axactly as you have done ?” This idea restored Murat to himself; he arose, traversed his tent, and his dry aud brilliant eye shot forth lightning. “Yes, ye3,” said he, with fire, “I will re main. ’There is no war elsewhere—here only the combat. 1’ut I will wrench it from him. I will take all myself, and give him nothing—not a skumish. I swear to you, Bolliard. he shall not even see an en emy.” And. leaving his lent, he flew to the outpost. Now we ask the historical General what misfortunes might not result from such dispositions in such men ? Waycross Reporter: Col. S. G. McLendon, of Thomasville, has been chosen President of the Bainbridge, Cuthbcrt and Columbus railroad. It is only a question of time when this im portant line will be completed. The right of way has long since been clear ed and much of the grading done. If the S, F. & W. railway company should not add this important link to their system, it is said that the Central sys tem will take hold of it and add it to theirs. A number of men who had retired from the Dublin Metropolitan Police force left Dublin recently for Queenstown. They were accompanied to the North Wall, the place of embarkat ion, by a vast number of policemen in plain clothes to bid them good bye. It appears that all those meu joined under the Police Act of 18C7. There is said to be a daily increasing discontent both among the Dublin Metro politan Police and the Constabulary, and that many of them have come and many more are coming to this country also. Their compulsory habits of temperance and order will make them good citizens. Of course, their emigration at this tim» is mamly doe to the disagreeable work they are compelled to perform. Tlie Man Who ltcllcvcd he wan a Woman. Seneca (S. C.) Journal. Quite a play of imagination occurred the other day with a well-to-do farmer in Pickens county. Yery portly in size, lie was taken sick—a general lgt-down of the nervous system—and, to the surprise of his friends, he imagined himself a wornau, and so impressed was he with it that he drove every male doctor out of the house and sent three mile3 after a food old lady who for years had been nursing the sick, and nothing would do but she must rub him and “dcctorl’y” him exactly as if he was a woman. The old woman humored bis whims even to making hot teas and gruel, ar.d after rubbing him an hour or two she finally persuaded him the crisis was over that instead of a woman he was a large, full-grown man. The regular phy sician rode home with mouth stretched, and the whole neighborhood got in such a titter that the portly an! dignified gentleman cannot appear on tbe church grouud Sundays without a smile all around- Dr. Folger pronounces it the only case of mulerific mania he has ever known record ed in this evantry. Poe, the Poet, SIar4ere4. Dr. J. J. Moras, of Fall* Church, Va., in a lecture upon the death-of Poe, said : As the shades of evening descended upon Baltimore, Poe had rambled on until he had reaehed a dan* gerous portion of the town, where it was unsafe for a man to loiter alone. Here the men who had been following came up with him and he was forced into a low den, where he was drugged robbed, stripped of his apparel and then clothed in the filthy rags of one of the brntes who had assaulted him. From this place he was thrust into the street, and as he staggered along, his brain benumbed by the deadly drug, he fell over- an obstacle in his pathway and lay insensible for hours exposed to, the cutting October air. A gentleman passing recognized the face of Poe as he lay prone upon the street, aud call ing a hack he directed that he be con* veyed to the Washington Hospital, send ing his card to Dr. Moran, with tie single word ‘Poe’ written in the corner. Poe was cared for, and received ener getic medical medical treatment to counteract the effect of his depressed condition. During this time Dr. Moran said to him: ‘How do you feel, Mr, Poe?’ ‘Miserable.’ ‘Do you suffer any pain ?’ •No.’ ‘How long have you been sick ?’ ‘I cannot say.’ As Poe’s last hours approached Dr. Moran said that he bent over him and asked if he had any word he wished communicated to his friends. Poe rais ed his fading eyes and answered, ‘Nev ermore.’ In a f ew momenta he turned uneasily and moaned : “0 God, is there no ransom for the deathless spirit?” Continuing, he said : “He who rode the heavens and upholds the universe has His decrees written on the frontlet of every human beiDg.” Then followed murmuring, growing fainter and fainter then a tremor of the limbs, a faint sigh, and the spirit of Edgar Alien Poe had passed the boundary line that divides time from eternity.— Washington Post. Am “Orgom.” ‘Young subscriber’ wants to know •what 13 an organ ?’ It is the opposi tion paper, my son ; the vile and truck ling shtet through whose venomous maw, fetid with vies and festering with the loathsome corruption in which it daily wallows, in the other party, blister edwith the plague spot of political lep rosy, sewers are the noisome filth of its pestilential ideas, Gur-r-r!! That’s what an organ is, my boy. Our own paper is a Fearless and Outspoken Champion for tbe Truth. You may have noticed that.—Hawleeye. A Holt from u Clear Sky. The Hawaiian earthquake of 1837 is de scribed for the first time by an eye witness in Missionary Coan's new book. On the 8th of November, 1837. at evening pray* era we were startled by a heavy thud and a sudden jar of the earth. The sound was like the fall of some vast body upon the beach, and in a few seconds the noise of minified voices rising for a mile along the shore thrilled U3 like the wail of doom. InstanHy this was followed by a like wail from all the native bouses around us. I immediately ran down to the sea, where a scene of wild ruin was spread out before me; the sea, moved by an unseen band, had, all on a sudden, risen iu a gigantic wave, aud this wave; rushing in with the speed of a race-horse, had fallen upon the shore sweeping everything not more than fifteen or. twenty feet above high-water into indiscriminate ruin. Houses, furni ture, fuel, timber, canoes, food, clothing, everything floated wildly upon the flood. About two hundred people, from the old man and woman of three score years and ten to the Dew-born infant, stripoed ot their earthly all, were straggling in the tumultuous waves. So sudden and unexpected was the ca tastrophe that the people along the shore were literally “eating and drinking,” and they “knew not until the flood came and swept them all away.” The harbor was full of strcgglers calling for help, while frantic parents and children, wives and hnsbands ran to and fro along the beach seeking for their lost one*. As wave after wave came m and retired the stragglers were brought near the shore, where the more vigorous landed with desperate efforts and the weaker and exhausted were car ried back upon the retreating wave, some to sink and rise no more till the noise of judgment wakes them- The Work of un Editor. The duties of the genuiue dyed-in- the-wool simon-pure editor are multi-- farious and muLitudious. His work is not only to ‘do »little writin’,’ as is sometimes supposed, but to eoll, to glean, to select, to discriminate, to decide, to foresee, to observe, to grasp, to explain, to elucidate, to inflate, to boil down, ‘to be, to do and to^suffer,’ and to several hundred other verbs j with a large number of districts yet to hear from—Newsdealers Bulletin. CITY TREASURER’S REPORT. C. L. Harrell, city treasurer in account with city council of Bainbridge, Georgia' Ordinary and extra ordinary expense ac count, 1882. Jan. 2 To cash on hand last report $1045 76 TO CASH FROM. A L Townsend gen tax 1881 H G Townsend gen tax Matilda Nelson geD tax Mrs Ella Hines gen tax J W Lathrop k Co gen tax D A Russell trust gen tax J A Roberts & Co tax D A Russell gen tax Fleming k Russell tax L F Bark ett mill license Alexander k Russell tax C N Buchanan gen tax- W R Mims general tax E S Law general tax T 8 Tuggle general tax 3 F G Arnett general tax Burrell Crawford tax Mrs E H Hutchins tax Mrs W E Rutherford tax H F Dixon general tax ♦ Fleming k Rutherford 4 W E Rutherford tax B E Russell gen tax 5 Mr* Y Conioe gen tax 90 96 60 16 80 37 80 14 13 3 00 6 60 300 6 £5 6 00 35 1 50 7 29 7 20 18 60 1 50 38 2 49 4 86 1 50 9 27 15 90 300 B S Brackett geo tax 1 53 Est Mrs Alice Russell tax 7 20 9 G W Dykes fine 300 Wm Harris fine 300 M O’Neal fine 300 Jno Fleming gen tar 3 00 E A Armfield gen tax I 50 J Avristt general tax 1 90 G D GrifKn general tax 15 72 Julia Williams geu tax 3 35 8.A Weil general tax 129 Geo Ivey general tax 67 10 B Kenney general tax 5 52 11 C K Dickenson g’no lic’ut 10 00 13 J Lawrence m qh’t lie’ns 5 00 14 Aadrew Trnluck fiue 2 00 16 Mr* Piety Belcher board ing house license Mrs Jennie Lanier board ing house license 17 Stephen Collier fine Wm Davis fine 25 A W Fordham 1 one-horse dray license 28 Juo Long wood fine Horrace Hill fine 30 Smart Shoat fine Feb. 2 H A Blount g’no lie’ns 4 Morton Big 4 one enter tamment 8 Henry Bratcher fine J A Donalsou k Co m’ch’t license A L Townsend g’no lic’n* ’1' R Warded said 2 bbls Henry Conaway fine W O Fleming part gen tax 17 Butts k Terrell g’no lic’na 20 J 1 Hahn tailor license 20 Isaac Loeb fine Henry Bruton fine 24 J Hanptjnnk license 27 Asby Weathers fine Mar. 4 Harry Pease 3 entert’raent* 8 J C Seafer street license 17 Jno Grice fine 18 Henry Jackson fine 6 00* 3 00 2 00 200 1 00 10 00 500 300 5 OO 10 00 2 25 1 00 20 00 10 00 5 00 300 4 00 7 50 1 00 15 00 2 00 100 50 $ 2009 78 ST CASH PAID. . 2 B E Russell Voucher L 25 00 B E Russel 2 2 50 Smith k Tranb 3 2 42 W D Lewis 4 30 00 James Pettis 5 25 00 E Johnson 6 4 30 T R Wardell 7 25 00 J D Harrell k Bro 8 19 79 H F Gaulden 9 1 50 "W J Bruton 10 4 30 Ed Henderson 11 1 50 E H Smart 12 50 00 E U Smart 13' 14 49 R Kenney U 5 25 N Creswell 15 2 25 W D Lewis 15 1 50 W D Lewis 17 6 64 J’ R Wardell 18 7 20 Jno Johnson 19 6 00 W W Harrell 20 15 00 G F Westmoreland 21 1 50 Broom k Lewis 22 31 25 W J Tonge 23 1 50 James Pettis 24 7 20 Jno Wood 25 1 50 J R Graves 26 5 00 Wm Turner 27 9 03 Ben Rodgers 28 1 50 C Daniels 29 1 50 J H Colbert 30 1 50 U J Williams 31 150 S F & W R R 32 243 12 Wyatt Moore 83 8 55 H B Ehrlich k Co 34 35 B £ Russell 35 7 20 H Collum 36 3 65 Chess Carley k Co 37 7 45 W W Wright 38 200 i. 8 Jno Johnson 39 1 72 B E Russell 40 25 00 Jno Scott 41 19 59 E H Smith 43 18 45 Chess Carley k Co 43 7.71 Wvlly & Clark 44 7 05 H B Ehrlich k Co 45 U 50 Lamar Rankin k Lamar 46 183 W D Lewis 47 2188 A E Smart 48 35 57 T R Wardell 49 17 80 James Pettis 60 17 80 E Johnson 61 136 J L Robinsov 62 1 00 Jno Johnson 63 428 S F^& WRB 64 2 08 E J Morgan 59 1 50 •. 7 T R Wardell 56 24 90 Cbandlee Quarl* k Co 67 14 15 A E Smith 68 8 43 SF kWRR 69 100 E H Smart 60 60 00 Jno Johnson 61 600 James Pettis 62 25 00 A W Fordham 63 tv J Nteinioger 64 * 125 David Waters 65 1 50 Jno Scott 66 13 90 B E Russell’ 67 25 00 W D Lewis 68 30 00 13 Str Chattahoochee 69 > 2 25 20 E J Morgan 70 7 67 for 4 coupons $2( each 10 00 for 5 coupons $5 each 25 00 for 6 bonds $50 300 00 for 5 bonds $100 each 608 00 com. on $354 00 co! 1 11 per cent f 81 com. on $1582 28 p’d. out ljner cent 23 73 Balance on hand 398 46 1337 42 $2000 78 C. X. IIakrilu, City Treasurer. 0MQa week- $12 a day at home ^easily made. Costly outfit free. Address Truk & Co , Augusta Maine- Hm